Supermarket fridges canât cope with the heat in Broken Britain
Supermarket fridges canât cope with the heat in Broken Britain

Guy KellySat, June 27, 2026 at 5:52 PM UTC
0

Empty shelves at Streatham Hill Tesco this week - Ben de Groot
Supermarkets have always been precision-engineered to know consumer behaviour inside out. So it is that they seem to know what we want before weâve even thought of it. Every element â from pricing and layout to car park and colour scheme â has been thought about with our psychology in mind.
Imagine shoppersâ surprise this week, then, to find that most supermarkets across the country had taken the most unhinged, enraging decision possible: during the three hottest June days on record, they decided to shut the fridge aisles.
The rumours came first, via my South London areaâs parentsâ WhatsApp group â a gargantuan operation that could bring down the Government if it so wished. âMorning, donât go to Streatham Tesco Extra â their fridges and freezers are broken,â came an announcement, with the gritted teeth emoji.
A photograph followed, showing not just empty fridges, but entire aisles closed off and chest freezers similarly bare. Elsewhere, photos from other large supermarkets around the country would suggest, staff may well have bagged up the food within and binned it.
It turned out it wasnât just Tesco. Branches of almost all the major supermarkets, including Sainsburyâs, M&S and Waitrose, closed either some or all of their fridges this week, largely thanks to high temperatures rendering the machines inefficient.
âThese are older systems, and theyâre struggling in the heat,â explains Rupert Ashby, the chief executive of the British Frozen Food Federation (meaning the fridges, rather than the customers, who seem to have been coping much better).

Fresh fruit and vegetables missing from the shelves at the Finchley Road branch of M&S - Belinda Jiao
âIn older stores, which is most supermarkets really, you have whole banks of fridges and freezers on concrete floors, which are all connected and run by a remote system out in the car park, or on the roof.
âThese might have been built 40 years ago, and theyâre very efficient, in a temperate climate, taking the hot air out and dumping it outside. But if the temperature outside is very, very hot, they have to work so much harder and become very inefficient.â
By âinefficientâ, Ashby doesnât necessarily mean more expensive (though some supermarket staff were allegedly telling customers that the fridges were now too pricey to run) but rather that by struggling to remove heat, the whole system slows and fails to do what it is meant to do â not unlike a whirring old laptop.
Ashby says this is one type of fridge-and-freezer set-up you find in UK supermarkets, but the other is a more modern, plug-in unit that expresses the hot air back into the store itself. The store is air-conditioned, which deals with that air more efficiently â though they can still be made inefficient by a customer leaving the door open.
In fact, a few years ago, a campaign argued that the UK could cut its total electricity usage by 1 per cent if the top five British supermarkets put doors on fridges. This is partly why some supermarkets have kept fridges on this week but pulled modesty screens over them (âMy blinds are down to help keep our food cool,â read a sign in Sainsburyâs, in that grating anthropomorphic manner brands use), to act as temporary doors.
The other benefit of newer stores is that the floors are raised and modular, allowing for easy repairs. In the older ones, if one machine goes down, they all do. But machines can also be taken out of service when they appear to be struggling to cope and an on-site manager errs on the side of caution.
âIn fact, if you needed a shorter answer to why this has happened this week, itâs a food safety issue. Thereâs probably nothing wrong with eating lots of the food in those fridges and freezers if itâs defrosted a bit, especially the fruit and veg, but these are big companies, the world we live in means they wouldnât take the risk.â
Itâs an understandable explanation, but you can forgive customersâ surprise at discovering that a remarkable (but not entirely unheard of) heatwave can effectively break UK supermarkets, and presumably result in millions of pounds in wasted food.
âBritish summer update: the supermarket fridges have officially given up,â wrote influencer Rayan Basma (@mommy_and_her_girlies) on Instagram, alongside a video of her wandering around the shelves of an M&S that looked as if sheâd broken in overnight.
Basmaâs video was taken at the Temple Fortune branch of M&S on Finchley Road in North London.

Screens covered shelves devoid of produce in M&S in Finchley - Belinda Jiao
âIt feels like a new Covid,â says 40-year-old Joanna, after photographing the empty aisles to share with disbelieving friends and family on Saturday afternoon. âI think theyâve had a fridge breakdown since the beginning of the heatwave. It has just got worse, and today is the worst Iâve seen.
âI was hoping that the ice cream would be back but I think they havenât fixed the issue.â
Advertisement
Another customer, Liz, had wanted frozen supplies for a World Cup viewing party on Saturday evening, but left empty-handed. Aaron and Simone wanted pistachio ice cream and some steak, having struggled to find other supermarkets with working freezers nearby.
âWeâve been into loads of stores, I went to Tesco in Harlesden and Costco in Wembley yesterday and by the time I got to the till I doubled back to get some ice cream, they had boarded up all of the freezers, saying âyou canât take anything because the freezers are broken.ââ
Robert, 70, says: âWhen you consider that the entirety of [M&Sâs] business â theyâre a food hall â is about keeping food cool or frozen, and theyâve been in business for 100 years, I think itâs emblematic of exactly what this country is turning into. Itâs completely incapable of dealing with anything.â
And it has been the scene in supermarkets across the nation: dark veils drawn, as if the dairy aisle were a mafia widow, hastily written apology notices taped to fridge doors.
âFor anyone planning a food shop at Tesco Hythe this weekend... You might want to go elsewhere,â a community group in Essex announced, with photographs of its own barren aisles.
âJust a heads up, M&S at Nugent have emptied all their fridges and freezers of food because they canât cope with the heat,â a woman in Orpington, Kent, wrote. There were similar reports from up and down Britain â Bristol, Merthyr Tydfil, Newcastle, Fylde, Carlisle, the Isle of Man, Taunton â nowhere seemed to escape the Big Thaw.

Shoppers at M&S in Finchley Road leaving the store empty-handed - Belinda Jiao
Some customers have complained of their weekly food delivery being cancelled, while a few live in locations where not a single supermarket had a functioning fridge.
Phil Pluck, the chief executive of the Cold Chain Federation told The Grocer that chilled warehouses, where stock which ends up in those switched-off fridges is kept, might start to fail if the heatwave persists.
Ashby says that no supermarket would willingly switch fridges off merely to save energy, as itâs all wasted profit. Nor would they bin food they could feasibly (and safely) save. âAnd Waitrose were certainly taking what they could back to freezer warehouses or into chilled lorries, but I donât know about others.â
In his role heading up the British Frozen Food Federation, he warned ministers that âwe need to watch out for something like this happening, so the infrastructure has to be there,â he says.
âThe old food minister, Daniel Zeichner, would listen, but less so since. But the people who fortunately do take it very seriously are the National Preparedness Committee, theyâre very good at recognising that itâs very much in our interests to care about this issue.â
One report last year found that up to 70 per cent of a supermarketâs non-supply-chain carbon emissions stem from cooling â mostly from energy consumption and the use of hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) refrigerants, potent greenhouse gases.
Ashby has written to Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, with one very simple, very specific proposal that might just help the planet and the customers: that we raise the temperature of freezers.
âDo you know why we currently set it at -18C? Because Clarence Birdseye, who invented modern freezers in 1924, worked off zero Fahrenheit, which is -18 Celsius. Think of all the progress weâve made in 102 years, but weâve never looked at it again.â

The empty frozen shelves in M&S are likely to result in profit loss - Belinda Jiao
He proposes that even three or four degrees Celsius warmer would do no harm to food safety (âbut maybe quality, though it variesâ) and save an enormous amount of energy. Plus, in weeks like this, the freezers might have stayed switched on.
Back at Temple Fortune M&S, a steady trickle of customers resorted to heading across the road to Waitrose. The fridges there were working, but empty too, thanks to the shortages elsewhere.
Robert points out that this M&S branch was recently closed for a full refurbishment, and yet the fridges still canât cope with todayâs weather. âItâs insane,â he sighs.
Try full access to The Telegraph free today. Unlock their award-winning website and essential news app, plus useful tools and expert guides for your money, health and holidays.
Source: âAOL Moneyâ